One of the things I like about JavaFX is that it can be deployed on a lot of platforms, and very easy btw. So in this post I’m going to use the Option Pricing code from previous posts to create a JavaFX application that runs both on desktop and as an applet without any code tweaks. 1,650 more words

To this point, we’ve created our skeleton application with a SplitPane view populated with a vertical list of colored icons at left. These icons are draggable from the left-hand pane to the right-hand pane, but that’s it. 1,590 more words

To this point, we’ve built a skeleton application with two custom controls: RootLayout, which consists of a hierarchy of containers that define the main application view, and DragIcon, which is a simple AnchorPane representing a draggable object we can drag and drop from the left to the right side of our application. 1,538 more words

To this point, we’ve set up a skeleton JavaFX application and separated the resources from the code. We’ve also build a few classes and two FXML documents with template code to make them functional. 974 more words

I recently noticed that the PopOver control, which I committed to the ControlsFX project, does not properly clip its content. It became obvious when I was working on the accordion popover for the FlexCalendarFX framework. 258 more words

Recently, I’ve been working on developing an app in Java. As I did research, it appears that, although JavaFX has received a lot of attention from Oracle lately (especially with the releases of Java 7 and Java 8), many in the industry think Oracle’s devotion to their UI framework to be… 919 more words